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James Hohmann, left, national political correspondent for The Washington Post, talks with Jim Acosta of CNN, far right, Margaret Talev, senior White House correspondent for Bloomberg and CNN political analyst, and Eli Stokols, White House reporter for the Wall Street Journal, about how to cover Trump and avoid politicizing the press.

The summit is timed almost a year to the day when Donald Trump was elected president and began his assault as "Fake News" on the media. The summit is intended to focus on strengthening political reporting and increasing trust in the media is this polarized era.

The gathering is being held in conjunction with the release of a study commissioned to gauge the public's level of trust in the media.

Fairness or false equivalence: Is it impartiality or "both sides" journalism?

Accuracy in an era of disputed facts

Breaking through partisan echo chambers

Avoiding the "enemies of the people" trap: Covering the president without politicizing the press

The anatomy of Washington scandals — and how to cover them

How to build audience trust through transparency in reporting

Poynter has engaged Scott Nover, with The Atlantic, to cover the summit and to tweet out what he's hearing. Here's his live coverage of his own tweets and the retweets of others at the conference. You can find a list of the participants here.

.@Acosta says a different kind of president requires a different kind of playbook for journalists, tougher questions #PoynterEthicsSummit

"We all believe there is a value in the system that exists… so you do things like go to the briefing or attend a holiday party… there’s a value in the exercise. It doesn’t mean you don’t do other things like investigative reporting." - @margarettalev at #PoynterEthicsSummit

Acosta says he thought if CNN had gone to WH Christmas party: "Gosh, what would happen if I were the CNN international reporter in some war zone, covering the Rohingya, and there are pictures of Jim Acosta laughing...with the guy who just called us fake news" #PoynterEthicsSummit

.@acosta: People shouldn’t be coming up to me or getting into Twitter saying they want to kill me. A virus injected into our political bloodstream is potentially lethal - sometimes I get frustrated...I do see a pretty severe crisis in this country. #PoynterEthicsSummithttps://t.co/BUbtVBvzp0

.@acosta: People shouldn’t be coming up to me or getting into Twitter saying they want to kill me. A virus injected into our political bloodstream is potentially lethal - sometimes I get frustrated...I do see a pretty severe crisis in this country. #PoynterEthicsSummithttps://t.co/BUbtVBvzp0

“The both-sides construct comes under attack for good reason. I don’t think that it’s useful to do something straight down the line like that. You have to use your own expertise on a beat.” - @Reddy at #PoynterEthicsSummit

.@perrybaconjr: Majority of country is white and I want to hear what they think on race. We need to cover diversity of country better-from Black Lives Matter to Trump supporters. Factchecking POTUS isn't our main job & 20min talking about "covfefe" is a waste #PoynterEthicsSummithttps://t.co/VRWzDtiyex

How to restore trust in media, by @jayrosen_nyu: 1. Don't oppose Trump, oppose a political style where facts and truth are expendable. 2. Focus on people’s troubles, not issues created to get them angry. 3. Generate trust through transparency, not authority #PoynterEthicsSummit

“I would never write off anybody… but, there’s still about 25 percent of the American public that believes Obama was not born in the U.S. and is a Muslim. Certain people are going to believe what they want to believe.” - @PostBaron#PoynterEthicsSummit

.@PostBaron: We should have seen Trump — or someone like him — coming, “before he descended the escalator.” We won’t make that mistake again; reporters are covering every corner of the U.S. #poynterethicssummit

“It’s not like we had a love-fest with the Obama administration. We tried for 2 years to get an interview. We do better with the current president in terms of access than the last one." – @PostBaron#PoynterEthicsSummit

“We are moving from a ‘Trust Me’ era of journalism to a ‘Show Me’ period. And that means the ‘show me’ has to be imbedded in the story itself, b/c the story could be next to pix of somebody’s grandkids on Facebook.” @TomRosenstiel#PoynterEthicsSummit

“The press should realize that the story isn’t about us... When Jared Kushner goes to CNN and says cut 25 percent of stats, that’s a big deal. When CNN announces that they’re not going to the White House Christmas Party, that’s chicken shit.” — @AlHuntDC#PoynterEthicsSummit

.@JonahNRO: What's great about Project Veritas video is it “caught” a WaPo reporter saying they’re not going to get ahead of the facts, they’re going to be follow investigation where it goes. What makes this different is Trump is not normal, not normal times #PoynterEthicsSummithttps://t.co/yVSPjccCWV

Journalists are always fighting the last war. Scandals are all called -gate; wars are Vietnams. This is not like those, this is not normal. @JonahNRO: “Figuring out what’s next is like anticipating the running path of an escaped monkey from a cocaine study.”#PoynterEthicsSummit

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When you see this byline, it could mean one of a couple of things: Several members of the Institute staff collaborated (such as when we issue guidelines or best practices) or the story was based off a press release that required minimal reporting.